North Korea propaganda leaflets found in Seoul attack S. Korean president and wife
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The leaflets include messages describing South Korean President Yoon Suk Yeol and his wife Kim Keon Hee as immoral and mentally unstable.
PHOTO: REUTERS
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SEOUL - North Korean propaganda leaflets apparently carried by balloons were found scattered on the streets of the South Korean capital Seoul on Oct 24, including some making personal attacks on the country's president and first lady.
The leaflets attacking South Korean President Yoon Suk Yeol and First Lady Kim Keon Hee found in the capital appear to be the first instance of the North Korean government directly sending anti-South propaganda material across the border.
They included graphic messages accusing the Yoon government of failures that had left his people living in despair, and describing the first couple as immoral and mentally unstable.
The resumption of a campaign by Pyongyang to send balloons into its neighbour comes as tensions on the peninsula have spiked with the North accusing South Korea's military of sending drones over Pyongyang to violate its sovereignty.
Since late May, North Korea has been sending thousands of balloons,
South Korea’s military said early on Oct 24 that North Korea had again sent balloons carrying suspected rubbish and they were headed to the capital region and the eastern part of South Korea.
The Presidential Security Service said in a statement rubbish dropped from North Korean balloons was found around the presidential office, but it posed no security or contamination risk. It did not provide further details of the material.
The North Korean balloons have caused some property damage as they landed in the South,
The South Korean government has declined to say if drones were flown toward the North or who may have sent them. REUTERS

